What full texts exist of Stephen Miller’s speeches (Charlie Kirk memorial, campaign addresses) and where can they be read?

Checked on February 3, 2026
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Executive summary

Full, published transcripts of Stephen Miller’s September 21, 2025 eulogy at Charlie Kirk’s memorial are available in multiple places online — notably a verbatim posting on Medium and at least one Substack reproduction — and major news outlets carried machine- and human-edited transcripts or extensive verbatim excerpts; reporting also highlights how commentators compared the text to historical propaganda [1] [2] [3] [4]. The reporting provided does not supply full texts of any “campaign addresses” by Miller; sources here focus on the memorial speech and on media reactions rather than a catalog of campaign-speech transcripts [5] [6].

1. Published verbatim transcripts: where to read Miller’s Charlie Kirk memorial speech

At least two independent publishers have posted what they present as full transcripts of Miller’s State Farm Stadium remarks: Halen Allison’s Medium post reproduces the speech in full and bills it as “the transcript” of Miller’s memorial address [1], and Michael D. Sellers’ Substack likewise publishes a full-text version and analysis of the same remarks [2]. Those reproductions are direct sources for readers seeking the speech text verbatim [1] [2].

2. News organizations: machine/human transcripts and extensive excerpts

Mainstream outlets reported and in some cases provided machine- or lightly edited transcripts and verbatim excerpts of Miller’s remarks: PBS’s coverage explicitly notes that its transcripts are “machine and human generated and lightly edited for accuracy,” indicating a published text readers can consult [3], while major outlets including TIME and ABC7 published long extracts and summaries of Miller’s lines for readers unable to access the full reproductions [5] [7].

3. Critical republishing, comparisons, and interpretive coverage

Beyond raw transcripts, several publications republished the speech text alongside interpretive reporting that highlighted its tone and rhetorical echoes; The National and AS USA reproduced notable lines and described reactions that compared Miller’s language to historical fascist propaganda, explicitly citing phrases like “The day that Charlie died, the angels wept” and “the light will defeat the dark” as flashpoints for those comparisons [4] [8]. Substack and independent commentary pieces also juxtaposed the full text with historical speeches to argue rhetorical similarity [2] [9].

4. Where the record is strong — and where it isn’t

The record in the provided reporting is clear and well-documented about the memorial speech: multiple outlets publish or republish what they present as the full text, and broadcasters note they used machine/human transcripts [1] [2] [3]. What the provided sources do not deliver is a compiled archive of Miller’s so-called “campaign addresses” or a list of other complete speeches by Miller; reporting in this dataset concentrates on the Charlie Kirk memorial and analyses of that single text rather than a wider, sourced catalogue of campaign or rally transcripts [5] [6].

5. How to verify and read the originals yourself

For readers seeking primary text: consult the Medium post by Halen Allison for a full transcript labeled as such [1], check Michael D. Sellers’ Substack reproduction for another full-text copy and commentary [2], and review mainstream outlets’ published transcripts or video-plus-transcript packages (for example PBS’s coverage, which notes its transcripts are machine/human generated) to cross-check wording and edits [3] [5]. Be aware that successive outlets added framing and interpretation — comparisons to Joseph Goebbels and claims of rhetoric “plagiarism” appear in multiple analyses — so corroborating the exact phrasing across several published transcripts is the safest way to read the speech in context [4] [8] [9].

Want to dive deeper?
Where can I find official White House transcripts of remarks by senior staff like Stephen Miller?
How have mainstream outlets handled publication of controversial political speech transcripts, and what are common editing practices?
What historical speeches have commentators compared Miller’s Charlie Kirk eulogy to, and where can those original texts be read?